Dialogue's Best of 2011 Awards
June 1, 2012[…] of 2011. Or for just $9.99, you can purchase a Kindle version of the complete collection of The Best of 2011. Click on ” Read more” to well, read more about the winning pieces:
[…] of 2011. Or for just $9.99, you can purchase a Kindle version of the complete collection of The Best of 2011. Click on ” Read more” to well, read more about the winning pieces:
Cross-posted at By Common Consent. By Board Member Michael Austin. I read the Qur’an often because it speaks peace to my soul. I know that sounds kooky, but I promise I’m not a […]
[…] dire to do so without knowing anything about that culture that you haven’t seen on the daily news. Read before you hate. Or at least before you allow politicians to convince you to do […]
[…] produced a fabulous look that nuances the Americanization thesis of Mormonism during the progressive era. You can read Bradley Kime’s JI review here, a Q&A here, and my personal review here. UofU Press Sets […]
[…] to a global phenomenon, and the fact that much of her observations and criticisms still hold true today (her Sorensen article on the Mormon aversion to “difficult” fiction, for instance, is nearly fifty years […]
[…] less well-written contributions are so dramatic and on-the-nose that they read almost like articles from the satiric news site The Onion (which, I suppose, could still be argued as relevant alternate history). Perhaps this was […]
[…] cultures in Joseph’s environment captures the central focus of my study, and it was particularly gratifying to read that she wished my book had been available when she started researching the Book of Mormon […]
[…] recent Salt Lake Tribune online survey asking readers, particularly Mormon readers, about their faith and their doubts. So today on the program we’re exploring the faith crises in the LDS community. Joining me is Fiona […]
[…] Book of Mormon looks in print by dividing it into the chapters and verses still in use today. Though it fits uncomfortably into the section’s theme of material culture, R. John Williams’s “The Ghost […]
[…] world. Happily, in 2015, the Supreme Court invalidated the bans on gay marriage. When I heard the news, I started sobbing, filled with joy that everyone can say “yes” to whomever they love. I […]